| Literature DB >> 26366304 |
Tzu-Hsien Lai1, Ekaterina Protsenko2, Yu-Chen Cheng1, Marco L Loggia2, Gianluca Coppola3, Wei-Ta Chen4.
Abstract
Headaches are universal experiences and among the most common disorders. While headache may be physiological in the acute setting, it can become a pathological and persistent condition. The mechanisms underlying the transition from episodic to chronic pain have been the subject of intense study. Using physiological and imaging methods, researchers have identified a number of different forms of neural plasticity associated with migraine and other headaches, including peripheral and central sensitization, and alterations in the endogenous mechanisms of pain modulation. While these changes have been proposed to contribute to headache and pain chronification, some findings are likely the results of repetitive noxious stimulation, such as atrophy of brain areas involved in pain perception and modulation. In this review, we provide a narrative overview of recent advances on the neuroimaging, electrophysiological and genetic aspects of neural plasticity associated with the most common forms of chronic headaches, including migraine, cluster headache, tension-type headache, and medication overuse headache.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26366304 PMCID: PMC4558449 DOI: 10.1155/2015/205985
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Neural plasticity in episodic and chronic migraine, without medication overuse.
| Episodic migraine (EM) | Chronic migraine (CM) | |
|---|---|---|
| Electrophysiology | ||
| VEP | Lack of habituation and peri-ictal normalization [ | No specific study |
| MEG | Peri-ictal normalization of visual cortical excitability, reflecting a dynamic modulation of cortical activities [ | Persistent ictal-like visual cortex excitability [ |
| TMS | Hyperexcitability measured by TMS indices of phosphene thresholds and magnetic suppression of perceptual accuracy [ | Reduced visual suppression correlating with high cortical excitability [ |
| SSEP | Abnormal habituation during interictal period and central sensitization (increase of N20-P25 amplitude) during ictal period [ | Increase of N20-P25 amplitudes recorded interictally in patients with CM compared with in patients with EM, indicating excessive cortical activation of the somatosensory pathway [ |
| BAEP | Lack of habituation of wave IV-V, especially with symptomatic vertigo [ | No specific study |
| LEP | Lack of habituation of N1 (generated by secondary somatosensory cortex) and N2-P2 (generated by ACC and insula) during interictal and ictal periods | Increase of amplitudes and rostral shift within ACC in patients with CM, similar to EM patients in the ictal period [ |
|
| ||
| Neuroimaging | ||
| Functional | ||
| PET | Activation of certain brain areas during ictal period indicating the involvement of specific brain areas associated with various symptoms in migraine including photophobia, nausea, and vertigo [ | Increased cerebral metabolism at brainstem compared to the global flow and also decreased cerebral metabolism in the medial frontal, parietal, and somatosensory cortex, indicating a potential dysfunction in the inhibitory pathways [ |
| fMRI | Greater activation of pain-matrix areas and less activation of pain inhibition areas [ | No specific study |
| rs-fMRI | Aberrant functional connectivity mostly in pain-matrix and also involving different networks including salience, default mode, central-executive, somatomotor, and frontoparietal attention networks [ | Aberrant functional connectivity in affective pain regions including anterior insula, amygdala, pulvinar, mediodorsal thalamus, middle temporal cortex, and periaqueductal gray [ |
| Structural | ||
| VBM | Decrease of gay matter volume of multiple brain areas within pain-matrix [ | No specific study; only two studies recruited small numbers of CM patients (11 and 3 patients each) without definite conclusions [ |
| SBM | Increase thickness of the somatosensory cortex and visual motion areas [ | No specific study |
| DTI | Changes of white matter microstructures in areas such as corpus callosum and cingulate gyrus [ | No changes in one study recruiting both CM and EM patients [ |
| Biochemical | ||
| MRS | Higher NAA/Cr ratio at dorsal pons, indicating possible neuronal hypertrophy; inverse correlation with headache frequency and intensity [ | Lower NAA/Cr as compared with EM with inverse correlation with headache frequency and intensity, indicating possible progression of neuronal loss during evolution [ |
VEP: visual evoked potential, MEG: magnetoencephalography, TMS: transcranial magnetic stimulation, SSEP: somatosensory evoked potential, BAEP: brainstem auditory evoked potential, LEP: laser evoked potential, ACC: anterior cingulate cortex, PET: positron emission topography, fMRI: functional magnetic resonance imaging, rs-fMRI: resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging; VBM: voxel-based morphometry, SBM: surface-based morphometry, DTI: diffusion tensor imaging, MRS: magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and NAA/Cr: N-acetylaspartate/creatine.